Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Unit 1: Trade Theory Heckscher-Ohlin Model 2/3/2012.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Unit 1: Trade Theory Heckscher-Ohlin Model 2/3/2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 1: Trade Theory Heckscher-Ohlin Model 2/3/2012

2 Trade occurs due to differences in resources. Countries have different relative abundance of factors of production. Production processes use factors of production with different relative intensity.

3 Heckscher-Ohlin: assumptions 1.2 countries: home & foreign. 2.2 goods: cloth & food. 3.2 factors of production: labor & capital. 4.Mix of labor and capital used varies across goods. 5.Supply of labor and capital: constant in each country varies across countries 6.Both labor and capital are mobile factors (long run). equalize returns (wage & rental rate) across sectors

4 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-1: The Production Possibility Frontier Without Factor Substitution with more than 1 factor OC no longer constant PPF no longer straight line Why? PPF subject to 2 constraints: capital and labor

5 unit capital requirement unit capital requirement – number of units of capital required to produce a unit of product Ricardian Model: unit labor a KC ≡ unit capital requirement for cloth a KF ≡ unit capital requirement for food a LC ≡ unit labor requirement for cloth a LF ≡ unit labor requirement for food

6 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-1: The Production Possibility Frontier Without Factor Substitution a KC Q C + a KF Q F ≤ K a LC Q C + a LF Q F ≤ L Q C ≡ output of cloth Q F ≡ output of food K ≡ capital stock L ≡ labor stock

7 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-1: The Production Possibility Frontier Without Factor Substitution The production possibilities frontier is subject to both constraints (capital & labor). Without factor substitution, the PPF is the interior of the two factor constraints.

8 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-1: The Production Possibility Frontier Without Factor Substitution Max food (point 1) fully uses capital with excess labor. Max cloth (point 2) fully uses labor with excess capital. Intersection of labor and capital constraints (point 3) fully uses capital and labor.

9 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-1: The Production Possibility Frontier Without Factor Substitution This example has 2 opportunity costs: low OC (2/3) when the PPF is on the capital constraint with low cloth / high food high OC (2) when the PPF is on the labor constraint with high cloth / low food

10 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-1: The Production Possibility Frontier Without Factor Substitution a KC Q C + a KF Q F ≤ K a LC Q C + a LF Q F ≤ L PPF equations don’t allow for factor substitution (unit factor requirements are constant on constraints).

11 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-2: The Production Possibility Frontier with Factor Substitution Allowing factor substitution leads to a curved PPF. Opportunity cost increases continuously as producers make more cloth.

12 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-3: Prices and Production Economy produces at the point that maximizes the value of production. This occurs where an isovalue line is tangent to the PPF (point Q): relative price (-P C /P F ) = opportunity cost (PPF slope)

13 Heckscher-Ohlin: production Fig. 5-3: Prices and Production V = P C Q C + P F Q F Q C ≡ output of cloth Q F ≡ output of food P C ≡ price of cloth P F ≡ price of food V ≡ total value -P C /P F ≡ slope of isovalue

14 Fig. 5-4: Input Possibilities in Food Production Heckscher-Ohlin: mix of inputs With factor substitution producers can choose different mixes of labor and capital to produce food: less capital & more labor; or more capital & less labor

15 Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices Fig. 5-5: Factor Prices and Input Choices Producers’ choice of factor mixes will depend on the wage rate (w) and the rental rate of capital (r). As w increases relative to r, producers will use more capital and less labor.

16 Fig. 5-5: Factor Prices and Input Choices Assume at any given w/r: a LC /a KC > a LF /a KF or L C /K C > L F /K F So cloth uses more labor relative to capital than food. Cloth is labor-intensive; food is capital-intensive. Cloth curve right of food curve. Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices

17 Fig. 5-6: Factor Prices and Goods Prices In competitive markets, the price of a good depends on its cost of production, which depends on the price of factors. Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices

18 Fig. 5-6: Factor Prices and Goods Prices Changes in w/r are tied to changes in P C /P F : change in r affects capital- intensive good more, change in w affects labor- intensive good more. Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices

19 Fig. 5-6: Factor Prices and Goods Prices Stolper-Samuelson theorem If the relative price of a good increases, then the real wage or rental rate of the factor used intensively in the production of that good increases, while the real wage or rental rate of the other factor decreases. Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices

20 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices By rotating the graph in figure 5-6 it can be combined with the graph from figure 5-5 (both have w/r as the y-axis).

21 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices Increasing the relative price P C /P F moves to the left on the SS curve in the left graph, which increases w/r. When w/r increases, move to the left on the FF and CC curves in the right graph, decreasing L/K.

22 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices Increasing the relative price P C /P F increases w/r (the relative nominal income of workers to capital owners).

23 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices Increasing the relative price P C /P F decreases L/K (ratio of labor to capital) in both cloth and food, which means K/L goes up (ratio of capital to labor) in both cloth and food.

24 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices More capital per unit of labor increases MPL (labor more productive). Less labor per capital decreases MPK (capital less productive).

25 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices In perfect competition factor price = factor productivity x good price. w = MPL C P C w = MPL F P F r = MPK C P C r = MPK F P F

26 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices Real income of factors will equal factor productivity. w/P C = MPL C w/P F = MPL F r/P C = MPK C r/P F = MPK F

27 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices We saw that increasing P C /P F leads to increasing w/r, which decreases L/K for both goods. Decreasing L/K means MPL C & MPL F increase; MPK C & MPK F decrease. So w/P C & w/P F increase; r/P C & r/P F decrease.

28 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices So increasing P C /P F means: raise income of workers relative to capital owners, lower ratio of labor to capital in both industries, raise real income of workers and lower real income of capital owners.

29 Fig. 5-7: From Goods Prices to Input Choices Heckscher-Ohlin: factor prices P C /P F ↑ → (w/r)↑, (L/K)↓, (K/L)↑, (w/P C )↑, (w/P F )↑, (r/P C )↓, (r/P F )↓

30 Heckscher-Ohlin: resources Fig. 5-8: Resources and Production Possibilities Rybczynski theorem If you hold output prices constant as the amount of a factor of production increases, then the supply of the good that uses this factor intensively increases and the supply of the other good decreases.

31 Heckscher-Ohlin: resources Assume L grows, L/K increases. PPF expands, biased towards cloth. (increase in L/K rises max cloth more than max food because cloth is more labor-intensive) P C /P F stays constant, so L/K used in both sectors remains constant. Fig. 5-8: Resources and Production Possibilities

32 Heckscher-Ohlin: resources To employ the additional workers, the economy expands production of the relatively labor-intensive good cloth and contracts production of the relatively capital-intensive good food. Fig. 5-8: Resources and Production Possibilities

33 Heckscher-Ohlin: resources Each shift of a unit of capital from food to cloth employs more units of labor because cloth is more labor intensive. This soaks up excess labor until all resources are fully employed. Fig. 5-8: Resources and Production Possibilities

34 Heckscher-Ohlin: resources An economy with a high ratio of labor to capital produces a high output of cloth relative to food. Fig. 5-8: Resources and Production Possibilities

35 L/K > L*/K* Home is relatively abundant in labor Foreign is relatively abundant in capital Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade

36 L/K > L*/K* Home is relatively scarce in capital Foreign is relatively scarce in labor Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade

37 L/K > L*/K* Home will be relatively efficient at producing cloth because cloth is relatively labor intensive. Foreign will be relatively efficient at producing food because food is relatively capital intensive. Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade

38 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade Countries are assumed to have the same tastes and therefore identical relative demands. Countries are assumed to have the same technology and therefore a given mix of capital and labor yields the same output of cloth and food in the two countries.

39 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade Each economy has a comparative advantage in producing the good that relatively intensively uses the factors of production in which the country is relatively well endowed. Home is labor abundant. Foreign is capital abundant.

40 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade Since cloth is relatively labor intensive, at each P C /P F, Home’s Q C /Q F will be higher than Foreign. Home’s relative supply curve lies to the right of Foreign’s.

41 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade The Heckscher-Ohlin model predicts a convergence of relative prices with trade. With trade, P C /P F rises in the relatively labor abundant (home) country and falls in the relatively labor scarce (foreign) country.

42 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade Home: the rise in P C /P F leads to a rise in the relative production of cloth and a fall in relative consumption of cloth. Home becomes an exporter of cloth and an importer of food.

43 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade Foreign: the fall in P C /P F leads to a fall in the relative production of cloth and a rise in relative consumption of cloth. Foreign becomes an exporter of food and an importer of cloth.

44 Fig. 5-9: Trade Leads to a Convergence of Relative Prices Heckscher-Ohlin: trade Heckscher-Ohlin theorem An economy has a comparative advantage in producing, and thus will export, goods that are relatively intensive in using its relatively abundant factors of production and will import goods that are relatively intensive in using its relatively scarce factors of production.

45 Heckscher-Ohlin: factor converge Unlike the Ricardian model, the Heckscher-Ohlin model predicts that factor prices will be equalized among countries that trade. Free trade equalizes relative output prices; the model links output prices to factor prices; thus factor prices are also equalized.

46 Heckscher-Ohlin: factor converge In the real world, factor prices are not equal across countries. Why not? Some model assumptions are wrong.

47 Heckscher-Ohlin: factor converge Assumptions… realities countries produce the same goods o may specialize (different goods) countries have same technologies o may have different technology price equalization in goods due to trade o trade barriers & transport costs factors instantly move among sectors o short run factor stickiness

48 Leontief paradox Leontief paradox – U.S. exports were less capital- intensive than U.S. imports, even though the U.S. is the most capital- abundant country in the world This holds internationally: trade often doesn’t run in the direction predicted by Heckscher-Ohlin. Heckscher-Ohlin: empirical tests

49 The model also predicts a larger volume of trade than is found. These problems probably stem from the assumption of common technology, which is unrealistic. Patterns of exports between developed (high income) and developing (low income) countries fit the theory quite well. Fig. 5-12: Skill Intensity and the Pattern of Imports from 2 Countries

50 Heckscher-Ohlin: empirical tests As Japan and the four Asian “miracle” countries became more skill-abundant, U.S. imports shifted from less skill- intensive industries toward more skill-intensive industries. Fig. 5-13: Changing Patterns of Comparative Advantage Fig. 5-13: Changing Patterns of Comparative Advantage


Download ppt "Unit 1: Trade Theory Heckscher-Ohlin Model 2/3/2012."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google